This question exhibits features that commonly lead to closure specifically for the tags and topics listed, but isn't the point of staging ground to provide feedback to OP to improve the quality of the post before it is released.
It comes across that you see some kind of conflict or contradiction here, but I'm not sure exactly what you think you're seeing, and I doubt it's actually a real issue.
Yes, the point of SG is to provide feedback so that a post can be improved before it's published - in the cases where meaningful improvement is possible.
However, the point of closing a question, similarly, is to provide feedback so that a post can be improved before it's reopened - again, in the cases where meaningful improvement is possible.
It's the same either way. The question should not be answered in its current state; if it looks fixable, the next step is to encourage OP to fix it (or cooperate in fixing it) to the point where it meets standards. Closing a question prevents it from being answered, just like holding it in SG does.
But SG is improving on this, by at least consciously trying to distinguish between fundamentally fixable ("minor edits" and "major changes") problems and fundamentally unfixable ones (duplicates and "off-topic" - the latter currently incorporates the "not reproducible or caused by a typo" close reason). I would argue that sometimes duplicates should be published (because they help find the canonical), but overall it's a significant improvement.
Should the level of standard be raised so that a question is forced to stay in this staging ground for longer or require votes before it is published?
I think our standards are fundamentally the same as always. We're just now being confronted, much more brutally than usual, with the prospect of actually consistently enforcing them.
That said, there are many unanswered questions remaining about how many votes should be needed for each "state transition";ld mean exactly the things that could be fixed by third-party editing, and that this option should only be selected as an apology for not directly making the edit; but...); etc. etc. But I think it will take several posts on Meta to disentangle that.